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    Why CNN Plus shut down early and prematurely

    The financial perspective

    Popular news channel CNN recently made the decision to discontinue its new streaming infant product CNN Plus less than a month after it went live, you might be wondering what went wrong. A recent Axios report has some financial charts that show that the new streaming service was far from reaching its projected year-end viewership goal, and would have spent over $400 million in 2022 alone in order to keep afloat.

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    The CNN Plus service was estimated to have two million subscribers by the end of the year, but around two weeks later, they found they’d only managed to attract 150,000 people. Well for any starting company, this may not be a bad figure to start with until it’s put into perspective. Services like Disney Plus had 10 million subscribers in its first day — and Quibi, which was similarly shut down early in life, saw 910,000 people sign up in its first few days — this wasn’t a lot for CNN.

    CNN Plus would have broken-even in 2025

    Starting a streaming service is no easy feat, the company was setting itself up to make a lot of money. CNN Plus was supposed to make a profit of $800 million per year by 2030, an even bigger cash cow than its cable network is today (which makes about $500 million in annual profit, Axios estimates).

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    How? The projections show that by 2030, CNN was betting it’d have 30 million people either paying $5.99 a month or $59.99 a year (which is $2.99 a month if they were early subscribers). The assumption here was the uptick of subscribers would eventually shift to making money instead of only spending it. By 2024, CNN thought it’d only lose $200 million, and break-even in 2025. From there, the company expected to make $200 million in 2026 before slowly crawling its way up to its $800 million decade-end goal in 2030.

    We don’t know the exact logic that caused CNN to pull the plug, but seeing how CNN Plus only had 150,000 subscribers and apparently needed to burn $1 billion for a chance at that $800 million a year, it’s not hard to see what was at stake. Instead, CNN got out early.

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    IN THIS STORY STREAM

    Farooq Gessa Mousal
    Farooq Gessa Mousal
    Techjaja: CTO

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